FDA approves latest versions of COVID vaccines but under new ‘framework’
As the school year kicks off and the seasons change, the latest version of COVID-19 vaccines will soon be available – but not to everyone.
The newest COVID-19 vaccines will not be mass-marketed to the general public as their predecessors have, and that’s because, though the Food and Drug Administration approved them, it has placed greater restrictions on their use than ever before.
These vaccines may be administered to adults 65 and older, younger people with medical conditions that put them at a high risk of severe COVID.
In a post on X, Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., hailed the new restrictions as a step in the right direction as part of a “framework” he promised Americans he would use. They’re available to those who want them yet unmandated, according to Kennedy, and some – which were only available to young children through emergency provisions – are no longer. He has also demanded that companies perform placebo-controlled trials and look into possible negative health impacts of the vaccines.
“The American people demanded science, safety, and common sense. This framework delivers all three,” he wrote.
He also said that the vaccines were available to “all patients who choose them after consulting with their doctors,” but the vaccines’ manufacturers have said they are authorized for use only in the populations already described with the only difference being the minimum age required. Moderna’s vaccine can be given to children as young as six months old with qualifying underlying medical conditions; Pfizer’s, to the same group of children ages five and up, and Novavax’s, to children 12 and up with those conditions.
A Centers for Disease Control and Prevention advisory panel is supposed to meet in September and vote on recommending the vaccines, which will greatly influence their rollout.
Latest News Stories
House Oversight Committee releases trove of Epstein documents
WATCH: Trump says ‘we’re going in’ as Pritzker pushes for money instead of troops
WATCH: Trump to push Supreme Court for quick ruling on tariff authority
Newsom seeks to regain control of rest of National Guard
GOP scrutinizing litigation group that ‘educated’ 2,000+ judges on climate change
Routh, representing himself, begins picking Florida jury Monday
SPACECOM will leave Colorado for Alabama’s Rocket City
Trump administration releases AmeriCorps funding
Illinois quick hits: DOJ sues over financial support for illegal aliens; state opposes proposed labor rule change
WATCH: Chicago residents: ‘We need help’ from feds to fight crime
WATCH: Pritzker touts education spending as potential challenger focuses on literacy
Congress returns, but Trump’s ‘pocket rescissions’ snarls govt funding process